It was the second night of the year, and Rosa González was watching her favorite television show, “La Ruleta de la Suerte.” Onscreen, contestants raced to solve word puzzles, spinning the wheel of fortune and following clues about Christmas carols. After a while, Rosa told her niece Griselda that she was going to bed, but she quickly came back, unable to rest without knowing the end. At eighty years old, mind games helped her stay sharp.
Rosa had spent most of her life in Catia La Mar, a small port city on Venezuela’s central coast. Her house by the water had been where family and friends gathered to celebrate baptisms and weddings. During the pandemic, Rosa’s memory had started to fade, so Griselda and her siblings had brought her to an apartment that they shared nearby. Griselda, a preschool teacher, slept in one room, her brothers Wilman and Wilfredo in another. Rosa slept on a pullout bed in a room with Jimmy, Griselda’s nineteen-year-old son. The constant company seemed to erase all traces of her dementia, Griselda told me. Rosa went everywhere with the family and insisted on helping her as she swept the floors and washed the dishes.
After the show ended, Rosa wished her niece good night. Griselda stayed up later, scrolling on her phone. “Two minutes after I finally lay down, I felt a missile coming toward us,” she told me. “I don’t know how, I just sensed it.” She rushed into the hallway and watched as the projectile, which had pierced through the bathroom wall, landed in Rosa and Jimmy’s room, erupting in flames. The blast sent Griselda flying into the living room, where she crashed amid the rubble. Ears ringing, she scanned the dark for her son and found him standing on the bed. “I could only see his red eyes,” she said. “He was covered in dust, head to toe.” Jimmy was crying for her: “Mamá, ayúdame, ayúdame.”
Griselda tried to keep him from panicking. “Mom, why did this happen to us?” Jimmy kept asking. Meanwhile, Wilman and Wilfredo were trying to help Rosa, who was lying on the floor, crushed by a washing machine. They managed to free her and hoist her onto a chair. The old woman was having trouble breathing. Still, she tried to calm Jimmy. “Don’t worry, mijo,” Griselda heard her say. “We’ll make it out of this one.”
The brothers brought Rosa to a medical clinic down the street. Meanwhile, Griselda and Jimmy sought refuge at an open lot behind the apartment building, where some neighbors were gathering. Eight of the structure’s sixteen apartments had been destroyed, their side walls blown up. “Is anyone alive?” the neighbors shouted.
Their voices reached the closet where Jesús Linares, a firefighter, was hiding with his sixteen-year-old daughter Yoliangel and his eighty-five-year-old mother, Jesucita. The explosion had shattered the windows of their apartment, one floor above Griselda’s, and covered them in shards of glass. Blood flowed from a cut above Jesús’s left eye, and his mother had small wounds throughout her body. Once Jesús recognized his neighbors were calling, he ventured into the remnants of the apartment, telling his daughter to follow. Seeing the night sky where there used to be walls, Yoliangel started screaming. “Hija, you are fortitude,” Jesús said to assure her.

As Yoliangel guided her grandmother down the stairs of the building, Jesús went to check on Tibisay Suárez, an eighty-year-old woman who lived next door. Tibisay had Alzheimer’s and no family in town, so the neighbors took turns caring for her. When Jesús entered the apartment, he found her sitting in a pool of blood. “There was a gash across her forehead, temple to temple, down to the skull,” he told me. He tore an old bedsheet to dress Tibisay’s wounds and put on her shoes, so she would not cut her feet.
Other neighbors brought Tibisay to the clinic where Rosa was being treated, while Jesús and his family fled to a relative’s house, near a Venezuelan Navy base. Sitting in the dark, they were rattled by another wave of explosions. The base, less than a mile from the apartments, appears to have been the real target of the U.S. attacks in Catia La Mar. “What we wanted, more than anything, was for the sun to rise,” Jesús said.
Griselda and Jimmy, still in the parking lot, decided to seek refuge at the clinic. They had been there for less than half an hour when doctors came out to deliver the news: Rosa was dead.
Catia La Mar is separated from Caracas by mountains more than nine thousand feet tall, but residents of the capital had a similarly long night. American aircraft bombed multiple locations around the city, including airports, military bases, and transmission towers. After the last bomb dropped, the valley fell silent. Then, at 5:21 A.M., Donald Trump announced that President Nicolás Maduro had been captured, and some neighborhoods of Caracas broke out in cheers.
Later that day, I texted a friend in the city to ask about casualties. “I’m going to be very honest with you,” she said. “No one here is talking about the dead.” There were more pressing matters, such as fixing broken windows and stocking up on nonperishables. And though the evening had been frightening and the present was uncertain, many Venezuelans felt relieved: the person most responsible for the country’s descent into misery and despotism was gone, and would finally face justice; the regime that had governed the country for twenty-seven years was beginning to crack. If there were victims, they were probably complicit, and in any case, there was always a price to pay.
Hours after the attacks, the defense minister, Vladimir Padrino López, stated that the Venezuelan government was gathering information about the victims, but whatever it found did not become public. Trump ended up being the first leader to disclose casualties, telling reporters that Maduro had been guarded by Cuban agents, many of whom had been killed by U.S. forces. By that afternoon, reports had begun to circulate that there were dozens of new patients in Caracas’s military hospitals.
The following day, Padrino López conceded that much of Maduro’s defense team had died, without offering details. A government document listing fifteen fatalities in the battalion that guarded the President was leaked to local journalists, who also reported an additional ten deaths. Among them was one civilian victim, still unnamed.
By then, reports of Cuban officers killed in Caracas had begun to circulate on the island. On social media, residents of Río Cauto mourned Fernando Báez Hidalgo, a young lieutenant whose passing was described as “a pain that multiplies itself.” Unable to limit the spread of information, the Cuban President, Miguel Díaz-Canel, announced that thirty-two members of the country’s armed forces and its Interior Ministry had died during the U.S. attack. Later that night, Venezuela’s acting President, Delcy Rodríguez, shared her condolences.
Stephen Miller, the U.S. homeland-security adviser, boasted about the Cubans’ deaths during an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper the next day. “What our Special Forces encountered when they did that daring midnight assault into Caracas were armed Cuban guards, and they sustained massive numbers of casualties,” he said. When Tapper asked about civilian deaths, Miller claimed that there had not been any: “Every single kill was an enemy kill.” A Pentagon official later told The New Yorker that the U.S. strikes had been “precisely planned to achieve operational objectives” and that civilians had not been “intentionally targeted.”
By the time Miller went on CNN, Venezuelan journalists had identified two civilian victims: Rosa González and Johana Rodríguez Sierra. Originally from a town near Cartagena, in neighboring Colombia, Johana had spent most of her life in Caracas. For decades, she had looked after a wealthy family’s estate in the mountains south of the city, where she lived with her daughter Ana Corina. Just up the hill was a group of telecommunication antennas, some of which are believed to belong to the Venezuelan military. Their caretaker, Carlos Bracho, lived in a small yellow house on site and had been there for even longer than Johana.
The towers were one of the first targets attacked by the U.S. on January 3rd. Around two in the morning, there was an explosion, followed by the sound of an antenna crashing down. Johana and Ana Corina were awakened by the blast, a cousin told the Colombian newspaper El Universal. Johana, wanting to know what had happened, decided to head for the towers, and Ana Corina followed her. As they drew close, a second bomb fell, toppling another antenna, which landed squarely on the yellow house. Carlos’s nephew, who was there that night, told the Times that he saw shell fragments hit Johana across her chest. Ana Corina was also wounded, but she managed to call the cousin. “They are killing us!” the cousin heard her cry.
Carlos helped bring the woman to the nearest clinic, someone close to all of them said. Johana, bleeding profusely, died in transit. “On the one hand, I thank God that Carlos is alive,” the person told me. “On the other, I ask God why he took Johana.”
Missiles also hit the residential neighborhood of La Boyera, down the mountain from the transmission towers. One fell in seventy-four-year-old Arturo Berti’s garden, next to the town house that he shares with his wife and sister, who are also in their seventies. A security camera captured the bomb as it exploded, setting the surrounding trees on fire and splintering the windows of neighboring apartments, including the one where Ana María Campos, fifty-one, lives with her seventy-year-old mother, Gracia.
When Ana María woke up, there was a big hole next to her bed. Everything was covered in dust, including her eyes, so she had to feel her way through the house. There were holes in the kitchen wall, the living-room floor, the ceiling of her mother’s room. Ana María called out to her dad for help, even though he had died eight years earlier. “In the darkest moment of your life, you reach for that connection with a loved one,” she explained. Nearly everyone in her family has either died or left the country, leaving her and Gracia alone in Caracas. “Little by little, we settle into this feeling of having been abandoned by life,” Ana María told me.
By January 6th, the death count had risen to fifty-eight: thirty-two Cuban agents, twenty-four Venezuelan soldiers, Rosa, and Johana. In a televised visit to western Caracas that evening, Delcy Rodríguez decreed seven days of national mourning. “The images of lifeless bodies have pierced my soul, but I know that they were martyred for the supreme values of the Republic,” she told the cameras. The armed forces held ceremonies for officers killed during the U.S. attack. Its social-media channels were flooded with videos of wooden caskets draped in the yellow, blue, and red of the Venezuelan flag, set to the opening verse of a song by Alí Primera: “Those who die for life cannot be called dead.”
“This is a regime that loves propaganda,” the Venezuelan journalist Roberto Deniz told me. “And if there is something the revolution has always taken pride in, it’s its soldiers.” Yet the identities of many of the fallen officers had been shrouded in secrecy. An Instagram post by a general from the state of Aragua appeared to be the first public notice that the Presidential guard Eduardo Peraza Moreno had perished, four days after the fact. His name couldn’t be found on any lists or headlines. The singer Claudio David Balcane, who told me that he was a childhood friend of Eduardo, said it was as if a ghost had died: “He was twenty-eight years old. He came to this world and left it, and no one found out.”
Ronna Rísquez, a journalist who has spent years exposing violent deaths in Venezuela, speculated that the government had avoided publishing a list of victims because it was reluctant “to recognize the staggering number of Cuban officers tasked with Maduro’s custody.” Rísquez is the co-founder and director of Monitor de Víctimas, an investigative platform that provides comprehensive data on violence in the country. Between 2017 and 2024, her team documented more than six thousand homicides, two-fifths of which had been committed by government forces. This month, the reporters have been focussed on exposing the human cost of the U.S. attack. By January 18th, they had verified eighty deaths, including those of the thirty-two Cubans.
The presence of Cuban military and security officers in Venezuela was an open secret. Two agreements signed in 2008, whose details were later published by Reuters, granted Cuba the power to train Venezuelan soldiers and intelligence agents and restructure much of the country’s security apparatus. Still, both governments have consistently dodged questions about an overseas deployment or flat-out denied it. In a 2019 interview, Maduro suggested that there were no Cuban military officials stationed in the country, and declared that everyone in his security ring was Venezuelan. Díaz-Canel’s announcement that Cuban agents had died in Venezuela, and his government’s subsequent publication of the men’s names and ranks, broke decades of precedent.
The two most senior men on the list, Colonel Humberto Roca and Colonel Lázaro Rodríguez, were identified in official obituaries as members of the Cuban Interior Ministry’s personal security division. Rodríguez had “organized the protection” of the island’s leaders, while Roca had held “maximum responsibility” for Fidel Castro’s safety. The majority of victims from the armed forces, however, were said to have been rank-and-file soldiers. A relative of Luis Hidalgo, who appeared on the list as a fifty-seven-year-old soldier, told the Cuban journalist Mario Pentón that Hidalgo was a civilian, and had been working as a chauffeur. “He did not go to Venezuela to defend a homeland, or to defend anything at all; he went there to help his family,” the relative said.
In Venezuela, the demise of military officers elicited little sympathy, and that of Cubans even less. “The only deaths we are saddened by are those of civilians,” one man declared on Instagram. Everyone else, another one wrote, “had been on the wrong side of history.” The reports by Monitor de Víctimas prompted many users to enumerate the victims of Maduro’s regime. Compared with the eight million Venezuelans who had fled the country, the nearly twenty thousand who had been detained for political reasons, the thousands who had been extrajudicially executed, and the hundreds who had been tortured, the deaths of a few dozen people seemed of little significance.
On January 10th, Rísquez’s team identified two more civilian victims: Lenín Ramírez Osorio and Eduardo Soto Libre, who had been previously listed as military officials, were actually air-traffic controllers. The men had been doing a shift at the Óscar Machado Zuloaga airport, an hour south of Caracas, when the U.S. bombed the area. Lenín had offered to drive Eduardo. A few minutes after his white car left the airport, it appears to have been hit by an explosive. Before dawn, several men passed the vehicle and stopped to film the wreckage. Only the chassis remained, engulfed by flames. Coming near, one of the passersby made out two elongated forms, the color of charcoal. They were Lenín and Eduardo.
When the videos were shared on social media, many Venezuelans responded with skepticism. Some doubted that the car had been bombed or that anyone had been killed. Others speculated that the passengers were connected to the government. Two sisters close to Lenín fought to set the record straight. “They worked at the airport,” one of them explained. “The driver was my friend, and now he is gone.” Despite their efforts, many brushed off the men’s passing as “collateral damage.” Eventually, the sisters stopped responding, and their father took over. “Today, Lenín’s family and friends cry for him,” he wrote. “This is not about politics. Please, respect other people’s pain.” ♦













